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     <title>Seeing a fabulous vision of the future</title>
   	 <description>	It was a harmonic convergence of scheduling that found me spending six solid hours with some of Silicon Valley's brightest minds. Without giving it much thought, I committed recently to a morning of meetings at Hewlett-Packard's sprawling lab on a Palo Alto, Calif., hillside on the same day I had agreed to an afternoon tour of the more modest InCube Labs in a San Jose industrial district.</description>
     <link>http://www.physorg.com/news172344876.html</link>
	 <category>Technology</category>
	 <pubDate>Wed, 16 Sep 2009 22:40:01 EST</pubDate>
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     <title>HP Labs says reorg paying off with new money-making technology</title>
   	 <description>If Hewlett-Packard hadn't reorganized its research efforts a little more than a year ago, according to Prith Banerjee, director of the world-renowned HP Labs, people on the business side of the company might be asking some hard questions today.</description>
     <link>http://www.physorg.com/news156623759.html</link>
	 <category>Technology</category>
	 <pubDate>Wed, 18 Mar 2009 19:36:55 EST</pubDate>
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     <title>HP Labs award will lay groundwork for next generation computers</title>
   	 <description>While most personal computers today can process a few hundred thousand calculations per second, computer scientists are laying the groundwork for exascale machines that will process more than a million trillion  - or 10^18  - calculations per second. Just a few months ago, scientists reached the long-sought-after high-performance computing milestone of one petaflop by processing more than a thousand trillion  - or 10^15  - calculations per second.</description>
     <link>http://www.physorg.com/news140865606.html</link>
	 <category>Technology</category>
	 <pubDate>Wed, 17 Sep 2008 10:20:06 EST</pubDate>
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